I believe the perceptions got bigger after O'Day/Pflu were fired.
The firings did at least two negative things. They validated incorrect perceptions that there were huge problems within the football team, that the sexual assault gang allegations were real, and that the problems came from lack of discipline and tolerance by the coach/AD and need to win at all costs. They expanded the local and attention on the various issues/problems and got the issues/problems into the national mainstream press.
This is not to indicate that there have not been too many off-field issues with football, starting in 2007, including too many dui citations.
However, if you sort through the matters/incidents and categorize them after the actual facts and results became known, and look objectively at what remains, things look much different and better. Still too much, but not nearly as serious.
Wilson's matter was self-defense and he was acquitted. That shouldn't be held against UM. The gang rape allegations appear not to have been valid, based upon what is publicly known at this time. The taser incident involved misconduct by the police, and ended with a nolo plea to disorderly conduct (and it was never assault against the police, as incorrectly put out initially by police spokesmen). Even the supposed felony assault by the 3 frosh turned out to be over-charged, and remaining charges were reduced to misdemeanors when the facts/testimony didn't support felony-level assault charges. And, had the Missoulian press coverage not put all of these things on the front page in literally scores of articles, there would have been a better information and perspective communicated, and perceptions would not have become so grossly beyond reality. The main DOJ investigation would probably not have occurred.
The firings did at least two negative things. They validated incorrect perceptions that there were huge problems within the football team, that the sexual assault gang allegations were real, and that the problems came from lack of discipline and tolerance by the coach/AD and need to win at all costs. They expanded the local and attention on the various issues/problems and got the issues/problems into the national mainstream press.
This is not to indicate that there have not been too many off-field issues with football, starting in 2007, including too many dui citations.
However, if you sort through the matters/incidents and categorize them after the actual facts and results became known, and look objectively at what remains, things look much different and better. Still too much, but not nearly as serious.
Wilson's matter was self-defense and he was acquitted. That shouldn't be held against UM. The gang rape allegations appear not to have been valid, based upon what is publicly known at this time. The taser incident involved misconduct by the police, and ended with a nolo plea to disorderly conduct (and it was never assault against the police, as incorrectly put out initially by police spokesmen). Even the supposed felony assault by the 3 frosh turned out to be over-charged, and remaining charges were reduced to misdemeanors when the facts/testimony didn't support felony-level assault charges. And, had the Missoulian press coverage not put all of these things on the front page in literally scores of articles, there would have been a better information and perspective communicated, and perceptions would not have become so grossly beyond reality. The main DOJ investigation would probably not have occurred.